Gold Warnings Surge as Banks Jump Off Bandwagon

Nomura forecast gold prices will fall in 2013, on Thursday, becoming the latest bank to turn bearish on the precious metal which has been a favorite hedge for investors who fear aggressive monetary stimulus will lead to rising inflation.

"For the first time since 2008, in our view, the investment environment for gold is deteriorating as economic recovery, rising interest rates and still benign Western inflation (for now) will likely leave some investors rethinking their cumulative $240 billion investment in gold over the past four years," wrote Nomura analysts in a sector note on Thursday.

In the note, Nomura cut its 2013 forecast for gold to $1,602 per ounce from $1,981, and its 2014 forecast to $1,750 from $1,800.

In a report last week, Goldman Sachs also forecast gold prices will fall in 2013, and cut its 2014 outlook. Meanwhile, several other banks have cut their outlook for bullion over the last two months, including BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse, Societe Generale and Citi.

"The gold price is in bubble territory and the sufficient conditions for a burst are coming into place," warned Societe Generale analysts Jesper Dannesboe and Robin Bhar, in a report on commodity strategy on Thursday.

"Investors have pushed the gold price sharply higher over the last 10 years, with the last five years' rally driven by fears that aggressive central bank quantitative easing would lead to very high inflation."

On Wednesday, the Financial Times reported that gold exchange traded funds were dumping bullion at record levels, as ETF investors bailed.

In all, gold ETFs have sold 140 tons since the start of January, the paper reported.

Gold traded at around $1,582 on Thursday afternoon, down around 5 percent since the start of the year, and 12 percent from a peak in October.

"The big investors are starting to get out of gold and I know that a lot of the big macro hedge funds are actively thinking about when you start shorting the stuff," Ric Deverell, global head of commodities at Credit Suisse, told CNBC Europe on Thursday.

"The reason they [gold investors] loaded up to the gills is because everybody seems to view gold as insurance. The world economic system is starting to look more stable, so they are starting to turn that around."

However, Philip Silverman, managing director of Kingsview Management in New York, said the ETF sell-off was in response to the tumble in spot gold prices, rather than increasing risk appetite or the equity rally.

"As far as ETFs go, a lot of hedge funds have been burnt by holding gold in an environment where equities are going through the roof… The selling is much more of a reaction to what's going on with gold right now," Silverman said.

Nonetheless, Deverell said market technicals mean the price of gold could plummet if it falls below $1,500.

"I think it bounces around where we are for a while, but if you move to the low $1,500s, you are going through some very interesting technical levels and I think it could fall very heavily."

"My big call is that in two or three years gold will be much lower than where we are now."

Silverman advised investors not to bet against gold, as central bank demand remains strong. The World Gold Council said last month that central banks gold purchases in 2012 were the highest for nearly 50 years, as banks sought to diversify their reserves.

"You don't fight the stock markets when the Fed is easing, so you wouldn't want to fight the central banks when they're buying gold, because they have deep pockets," he said.

SocGen's Dannesboe and Bhar said that in contrast to their gold outlook, they are increasingly bullish on palladium.

"The outlook for the palladium price is increasingly turning bullish on a combination of a negative supply shock, as the Russian government stockpile is nearly depleted, and a recovery in demand growth from auto catalysts and electronics," they said.